§ 822a. Public high school choice
(a) Definitions. In this section:
(1) “High school” means a public school or that portion of a public school that offers
grades 9 through 12 or some subset of those grades.
(2) “Student” means a student’s parent or guardian if the student is a minor or under
guardianship and means a student himself or herself if the student is not a minor.
(b) Limits on transferring students. A sending high school board may limit the number of resident students who transfer
to another high school under this section in each year; provided that in no case shall
it limit the potential number of new transferring students to fewer than five percent
of the resident students enrolled in the sending high school as of October 1 of the
academic year in which the calculation is made or 10 students, whichever is fewer;
and further provided that in no case shall the total number of transferring students
in any year exceed 10 percent of all resident high school students or 40 students,
whichever is fewer.
(c) Capacity. On or before February 1 each year, the board of a high school district shall define
and announce its capacity to accept students under this section. The Secretary shall
develop, review, and update guidelines to assist high school district boards to define
capacity limits. Guidelines may include limits based on the capacity of the program,
class, grade, school building, measurable adverse financial impact, or other factors,
but shall not be based on the need to provide special education services.
(d) Lottery.
(1) Subject to the provisions of subsection (f) of this section, if more than the allowable
number of students wish to transfer to a school under this section, then the board
of the receiving high school district shall devise a nondiscriminatory lottery system
for determining which students may transfer.
(2) Subject to the provisions of subsection (f) of this section, if more than the allowable
number of students wish to transfer from a school under this section, then the board
of the sending high school district shall devise a nondiscriminatory lottery system
for determining which students may transfer; provided, however:
(A) a board shall give preference to the transfer request of a student whose request to
transfer from the school was denied in a prior year; and
(B) a board that has established limits under subsection (b) of this section may choose
to waive those limits in any year.
(e) Application and notification.
(1) A high school district shall accept applications for enrollment until March 1 of the
school year preceding the school year for which the student is applying.
(2) A high school district shall notify each student of acceptance or rejection of the
application by April 1 of the school year preceding the school year for which the
student is applying.
(3) An accepted student shall notify both the sending and the receiving high schools of
his or her decision to enroll or not to enroll in the receiving high school by April
15 of the school year preceding the school year for which the student has applied.
(4) After sending notification of enrollment, a student may enroll in a school other than
the receiving high school only if the student, the receiving high school, and the
high school in which the student wishes to enroll agree. If the student becomes a
resident of a different school district, the student may enroll in the high school
maintained by the new district of residence.
(5) If a student who is enrolled in a high school other than in the school district of
residence notifies the school district of residence by July 15 of the intent to return
to that school for the following school year, the student shall be permitted to return
to the high school in the school district of residence without requiring agreement
of the receiving district or the sending district.
(f) Enrollment.
(1) An enrolled nonresident student shall be permitted to remain enrolled in the receiving
high school without renewed applications in subsequent years unless:
(A) the student graduates;
(B) the student is no longer a Vermont resident; or
(C) the student is expelled from school in accordance with adopted school policy.
(2) A career technical education (CTE) center serving the region in which a receiving
high school district is located shall be the CTE center in which a nonresident student
under this section is eligible to enroll. The nonresident student shall be eligible
to use any transportation the district provides for resident students attending the
CTE center.
(g) Tuition and other costs.
(1) Unless the sending and receiving schools agree to a different arrangement, no tuition
or other cost shall be charged by the receiving district or paid by the sending district
for a student transferring to a different high school under this section; provided,
however, a sending high school district shall pay special education and career technical
education costs for resident students pursuant to the provisions of this title.
(2) A student transferring to a different high school under this section shall pay no
tuition, fee, or other cost that is not also paid by students residing in the receiving
district.
(3) A district of residence shall include within its average daily membership any student
who transfers to another high school under this section; a receiving school district
shall not include any student who transfers to it under this section.
(h) Special education. If a student who is eligible for and receiving special education services chooses
to enroll in a high school other than in the high school district of residence, then
the receiving high school shall carry out the individualized education program, including
placement, developed by the sending high school district. If the receiving high school
believes that a student not on an individualized education program may be eligible
for special education services or that an existing individualized education program
should be altered, it shall notify the sending high school district. When a sending
high school district considers eligibility, development of an individualized education
program, or changes to a program, it shall give notice of meetings to the receiving
high school district and provide an opportunity for representatives of that district
to attend the meetings and participate in making decisions.
(i) Suspension and expulsion. A sending high school district is not required to provide services to a resident student
during a period of suspension or expulsion imposed by another high school district.
(j) Transportation. Jointly, the superintendent of each supervisory union shall establish and update a
statewide clearinghouse providing information to students about transportation options
among the high school districts.
(k) Nonapplicability of other laws. The provisions of subsections 824(b) and (c) (amount of tuition), 825(b) and (c) (maximum
tuition rate), and 826(a) (notice of tuition change) and section 836 (tuition overcharge
and undercharge) of this chapter shall not apply to enrollment in a high school pursuant
to this section.
(l) Waiver. If a high school board determines that participation under this section would adversely
affect students in its high school, then it may petition the Secretary for an exemption.
The Secretary’s decision shall be final.
(m) Report. Notwithstanding 2 V.S.A. § 20(d), the Secretary shall report annually in January to the Senate and House Committees
on Education on the implementation of public high school choice as provided in this
section, including a quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the program’s impact
on the quality of educational services available to students and the expansion of
educational opportunities. (Added 2011, No. 129 (Adj. Sess.), § 34; amended 2013, No. 56, § 4, eff. May 30, 2013; 2013, No. 92 (Adj. Sess.), § 97, eff. Feb. 14, 2014.)